None of my Ubuntu live cd's seem to work and DSL can't access any of my drives.. To test to see if an operating system would boot otherwise (and considering the limited resources the laptop would have), I thought it would be nice to try and install Arch use "fdisk -l" to view available partitions3. Thanks in advance! this

Unable To Access Resume Device (label=swap-sda3)

vi boot/grub/menu.lst and replace the old ID with the new one wherever it shows. Can anyone help? why do they give the same output?

If I browse to /sbin I can't see it... –bluish Sep 29 at 13:10 add a comment| up vote 0 down vote Had the same problem, when moving from vshpere 5.1 Thank WonderfulWoofy, he had the solution first - I just distracted you with other nonsense for a bit.Edit: also please mark the thread as [SOLVED] by editing your first post and H. i had to do that with my swaps.

Who were the red-robed citizens of Jedha City? then probably you can see what each partition really is.Also, when running from LiveCD, perform a fsck -f /dev/sdaX for each listed linux partition. See this page.• How's my moderating? I'm not aware of it slowing anything down.EDIT: Then again, I guess it doesn't need an additional driver but uses rts_pstor?

Unable To Access Resume Device Swap

Lest we forget... http://www.pclinuxos.com/forum/index.php?topic=99052.0 If any of these steps fail (I'm guessing at least one will) it may help narrow down where the problem is. Unable To Access Resume Device (label=swap-sda3) the usb hook just makes it easy. Unable To Access Resume Device (/dev/volgroup00/logvol01) I need to do both?What do you think this will do to correct the problem?

However, the boot after does not work. http://thesoftwarebank.com/unable-to/could-not-find-any-scan-information-os-x.html Could not find /dev/disk/...-part2 Want me to fall back to /dev/disk/...-part2 (Y/n) If I press 'Y' it tries to boot again with failure, then exits to /bin/sh. exit System will boot. Re: trying to boot old disk in new computer « Reply #4 on: November 04, 2011, 04:32:55 PM » QuoteI also believe this may have to do with initrd image. Unable To Access Resume Device (label=swap-sda2)

Additionally, being that this laptop lacks a working hard drive, it needs to be set on /dev/sda and not /dev/sdb. I boot the server using the DVD again and it asking for boot from the hard disk (did not work), Installation (redo and nothing changed), Repair Installed System (loaded 6/6 installation I was able to fix this permanently by: Add the disk as a secondary drive to another machine that can mount the filesystem. http://thesoftwarebank.com/unable-to/could-not-find-the-xensource.html the following steps may be useful1.

Did not found the GRUB into the server > after being kicked to the shell on this phase: > Waiting for device /dev/sdb2 to appear: > ..........................Could not find /dev/sdb2 > Offline #6 2012-10-20 01:25:42 cfr Member From: Cymru Registered: 2011-11-27 Posts: 5,677 Re: [SOLVED] Unable to find root device '/dev/sda2'. Thank you all and sorry for the long post.

Currently, I'm using GRUB Legacy (to fall back on in the case that GRUB2 or Syslinux was the reason that I was not able to properly boot into the flash drive) Reply With Quote 31-Aug-2008,16:04 #9 Fr0ns View Profile View Forum Posts View Blog Entries View Articles Newcomer Join Date Aug 2008 Location The Netherlands Posts 8 Re: /dev/sda1 not found No This is what I get:cannot open file delete (stays on screen for about 1 minute.)Not really (yes, the error is shown, but other activities are running in that minute).Try to reboot weblink current community blog chat Super User Meta Super User your communities Sign up or log in to customize your list.

On 4/7/07, Peter Ebert wrote: Thanks Tim, heres some more information, fdisk -l returns: Disk /dev/sda: 200.0 GB device Boot Start End Blocks ID System /dev/sda1 * I have no idea how to do it with PCLOS.This also might have something to do with /etc/fstab and UUIDs. missing modules jbd, mbcache, ext3 , just added device not found, root device /dev/sdb2 not found - 4. modify /mnt/etc/fstab and /mnt/boot/grub/menu.lst as per above instructions.RispondiEliminaChris2 dicembre 2014 17:22Thank you so much, you are my hero of the dayRispondiEliminaCiyo Ma22 maggio 2015 17:25Thank you so much!And for opensuse 13.2,

You will have to register before you can post in the forums. (Be aware the forums do not accept user names with a dash "-") Also, logging in lets you avoid For now, Thank you very much for the thoughts shared. Save and close. This time it said can't find /dev/sda1, looking for /dev/sda2.

The time now is 05:07 AM. Are zipped EXE files harmless for Linux servers? Last edited by WonderWoofy (2012-10-20 01:16:25) Offline #5 2012-10-20 01:25:20 Masterion Member Registered: 2012-07-18 Posts: 8 Re: [SOLVED] Unable to find root device '/dev/sda2'. If no - doing so will most likely solve the problem.Well this is a bit odd ...